This article's documentation is for anything that uses the Source engine. Click here for more information.

BSP (Source)

From Valve Developer Community
(Redirected from BSP (Source 1))
Jump to navigation Jump to search
English (en)Esperanto (eo)Русский (ru)Translate (Translate)
<BSP
This article is based on Rof's "The Source Engine BSP File Format" from October 2005, retrieved from Geocities before the service shut down. A mirror to the original version can be found here.
Todo: Some versions of BSPZIP (included in Team Fortress 2 Counter-Strike: Source Day of Defeat: Source Half-Life 2: Deathmatch Half-Life Deathmatch: Source Strata Source Jabroni Brawl: Episode 3) support LZMA compression of the lumps and packed files (supported by Source 2013 Multiplayer Strata Source Jabroni Brawl: Episode 3 and possibly more); update this page to reflect how this affects the format.
Note.pngNote:Once this page is up-to-date, the updated information should be translated to Russian.

Introduction

This document describes the structure of the BSP file format used by the Source engine. The format is more closely derived from the BSP format used in Quake II than that of GoldSrc (both of which are derived from Quake I's BSP format). Because of this, Max McGuire's article, Quake 2 BSP File Format is also of invaluable help in understanding the overall structure of the format and the parts of it that have remained the same or similar to its predecessors.

This document is an extension of notes made by Rof during the writing of their Half-Life 2 Half-Life 2 BSP file decompiler, VMEX. It therefore focuses on those parts of the format necessary to perform map decompilation (conversion of the BSP file back into a VMF file which can be loaded by the Hammer map editor).

Most of the information in this document comes from the Max McGuire article referenced above, from the source code included in the Source SDK (particularly the C header file public/bspfile.h), and from Rof's own experimentation during the writing of VMEX.

A certain familiarity with C/C++, geometry, and Source mapping terms is assumed on the part of the reader. Code (mostly C structures) is given in a fixed width font. Sometimes the structures as shown are modified from their actual definitions in the SDK header files, for reasons of clarity and consistency.

Overview

The BSP file contains the vast majority of the information needed by the Source engine to render and play a map. This includes the geometry of all the polygons in the level; references to the names and orientation of the textures to be drawn on those polygons; the data used to simulate the physical behaviour of the player and other items during the game; the location and properties of all brush-based, model (prop) based, and non-visible (logical) entities in the map; and the BSP tree and visibility table used to locate the player location in the map geometry and to render the visible map as efficiently as possible. Optionally, the map file can also contain any custom textures and models used on the level, embedded inside the map's Pakfile lump (see below).

Information not stored in the BSP file includes the map description text displayed by multiplayer games (such as Counter-Strike: Source Counter-Strike: Source or Half-Life 2: Deathmatch Half-Life 2: Deathmatch) after loading the map (stored in the file mapname.txt) and the AI navigation file used by non-player characters (NPCs) which need to navigate the map (stored in the file mapname.nav). Because of the way the Source engine file system works, these external files may also be embedded in the BSP file's Pakfile lump, though usually they are not.

Historically, map files were stored in the game's corresponding Steam Game Cache File (GCF), but these are no longer used since 2013. In current versions of all of Valve's games, maps are stored directly in the OS file system. Rarely, such as in some third-party games or mods (especially Black Mesa Black Mesa and most Source 2004/Source 2006 games that have been updated with SteamPipe), maps may be stored in VPK files; these can be extracted using GCFScape GCFScape or the newer VPKEdit VPKEdit.

The data in the BSP file can be stored in little-endian for PC and newer consoles such as Nintendo Switch or in big-endian for consoles such as the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. Byte-swapping is required when loading a little-endian file on a big-endian format platform such as Java and vice versa.

Warning.pngWarning:There are many conflicting versions of BSP! Their compatibility isn't clear as even BSPs with the same Version Number can have underlying differences that will render them incompatible with games other than their source. Therefore it is a good rule of thumb to always try and stick with the intended game and its compile tools when messing around with BSPs.

BSP file header

The BSP file starts with a header. This structure identifies the file as a Valve Source Engine BSP file, identifies the version of the format, and is then followed by a directory listing of the location, length, and version of up to 64 subsections of the file, known as lumps, that store different parts of the map data. Finally, the map revision is given.

The structure of the header is given in the SDK's public/bspfile.h header file, a file which will be referencing extensively throughout this document. The header is 1036 bytes long in total:

Note.pngNote:This struct has been renamed to BSPHeader_t in Alien Swarm Alien Swarm.
struct dheader_t
{
	int     ident;                  // BSP file identifier
	int     version;                // BSP file version
	lump_t  lumps[HEADER_LUMPS];    // lump directory array
	int     mapRevision;            // the map's revision (iteration, version) number
};

Where ident is a 4-byte magic number defined as:

// little-endian "VBSP"   0x50534256
#define IDBSPHEADER	(('P'<<24)+('S'<<16)+('B'<<8)+'V')

The first four bytes of the file are thus always VBSP (in ASCII). These bytes identify the file as a Valve BSP file; other BSP file formats use a different magic number (such as for id Software's Quake engine games, which start with IBSP). The GoldSrc GoldSrc BSP format does not use any magic number at all. The order of the magic number can also be used to determine the endianness of the file: VBSP is used for little-endian and PSBV for big-endian.

The second integer is the version of the BSP file format (BSPVERSION); for Source games, it ranges from 19 to 20 (21 since Left 4 Dead 2 Left 4 Dead 2) with the exception of VTMB, which uses an earlier version of the format, 17 (see table below). Note that BSP file formats for other engines (HL1, Quake series, etc.) use entirely different version number ranges.

Versions

This table gives an overview over the different BSP versions being used in some games based on the Source Source Engine.

Todo: add Titanfall 2 Titanfall 2, Day of Infamy Day of Infamy, Apex Legends Apex Legends and possibly others, as long they have modified lumps. See Template:GameOnSource.
Version Games Notes
17 Vampire: The Masquerade - Bloodlines Vampire: The Masquerade - Bloodlines modified: dface_t
17-18 Half-Life 2 Half-Life 2 (Beta) leaked beta
19 SiN Episodes SiN Episodes
Half-Life 2 (Xbox) Half-Life 2 (Xbox) Custom lightmap format
18-19 Half-Life: Source Half-Life: Source Only c4a1y.bsp is 18. The rest are 19.
Tools create v20 BSPs.
19-20 Half-Life 2 Half-Life 2 19 when released, partially 20 since Source 2007/2009 (Orange Box) up to Source 2013.
All maps are now 20 after 20th anniversary update.
Tools create v20 BSPs
Half-Life 2: Deathmatch Half-Life 2: Deathmatch 19 when released, partially 20 since Source 2007/2009 (Orange Box) update. Supports LZMA compressed BSP Files.
Tools create same format as Team Fortress 2 Team Fortress 2.
Half-Life Deathmatch: Source Half-Life Deathmatch: Source
Counter-Strike: Source Counter-Strike: Source
Day of Defeat: Source Day of Defeat: Source
20 Half-Life 2: Episode One Half-Life 2: Episode One
Half-Life 2: Episode Two Half-Life 2: Episode Two
Half-Life 2: Lost Coast Half-Life 2: Lost Coast
Garry's Mod Garry's Mod modified supports Bsp Version 21,Supports LZMA compressed BSP Files
Team Fortress 2 Team Fortress 2 modified ( newly compiled maps ): StaticPropLump_t (version = 10, stores prop lightmap resolution info and expanded bitflags); LZMA compressed game lumps, entity info, and pakfiles; ambient lighting lump (additional ambient cubes per visleaf)
Portal Portal
Left 4 Dead Left 4 Dead modified: StaticPropLump_t ( version = 8 ) and dworldlight_t
Zeno Clash Zeno Clash modified: StaticPropLump_t ( version = 7 )
Dark Messiah of Might and Magic Dark Messiah of Might and Magic modified: dheader_t, StaticPropLump_t, texinfo_t, dgamelump_t, dmodel_t
Vindictus Vindictus many modified structs
The Ship: Murder Party The Ship: Murder Party modified: StaticPropLump_t
Bloody Good Time Bloody Good Time modified: StaticPropLump_t
Black Mesa Black Mesa modified: StaticPropLump_t ( version = 11 ) (commercial/Steam release only)
Fairy Tale Busters Fairy Tale Busters (open beta version) modified: StaticPropLump_t ( version = 7 ), with a StaticPropLump_t ( version = 10 ) alike fields order
Eternal Silence Eternal Silence
NEOTOKYO° NEOTOKYO°
Postal III Postal III
Half-Life 2: Update Half-Life 2: Update
INSURGENCY: Modern Infantry Combat INSURGENCY: Modern Infantry Combat
Portal with RTX Portal with RTX
Tactical Intervention Tactical Intervention (Retail/FIX Launcher Release) 256-bit XOR Encryption (not just limited to BSPs)
E.Y.E: Divine Cybermancy E.Y.E: Divine Cybermancy
19-22 Jabroni Brawl: Episode 3 Jabroni Brawl: Episode 3 Map Compile Tools produce maps of the same format as Counter-Strike: Global Offensive CS:GO. Also supports LZMA-compressed game lumps, entity info, and pakfiles
Note.pngNote:BSP verison 22 support is seemingly only for Tactical Intervention Tactical Intervention, any other game with BSP version 22 is untested and most likely unsupported.
20-21 Source Filmmaker Source Filmmaker
21 Left 4 Dead 2 Left 4 Dead 2 modified: lump_t, old dbrushside_t
Alien Swarm Alien Swarm
Portal 2 Portal 2 modified: StaticPropLump_t ( version = 9 ), dbrushside_t and other structs
Portal 2 Sixense Perceptual Pack Portal 2 Sixense Perceptual Pack
Counter-Strike: Global Offensive Counter-Strike: Global Offensive modified: StaticPropLump_t ( version = 11 )
Dear Esther Dear Esther (commercial release) modified: StaticPropLump_t
Insurgency Insurgency (commercial release)
The Stanley Parable The Stanley Parable (commercial release)
The Beginner's Guide The Beginner's Guide
Dino D-Day Dino D-Day
Nuclear Dawn Nuclear Dawn
Revelations 2012 Revelations 2012
Alien Swarm: Reactive Drop Alien Swarm: Reactive Drop
Lambda Wars Lambda Wars
22 INFRA INFRA
Tactical Intervention Tactical Intervention (Steam Release) Derived from Portal 2 Portal 2 version 21, with lump #24 being used to store client side entities ( similar to lump #0 )
Dota 2 Dota 2 (pre-Reborn/original release) early betas, modified: dbrushside_t, ddispinfo_t
23 modified: dbrushside_t, ddispinfo_t, doverlay_t
25 Strata Source Strata Source In development
27 Contagion Contagion
29 Titanfall Titanfall heavily modified[How?]

For more details on game-specific BSP formats, see Source BSP File Format/Game-Specific.

Lump structure

Then follows an array of 16-byte lump_t structures. HEADER_LUMPS is defined as 64, so there are 64 entries. However, depending on the game and version, some lumps can be undefined or empty.

Each lump_t is defined in bspfile.h:

struct lump_t
{
	int    fileofs;      // offset into file (bytes)
	int    filelen;      // length of lump (bytes)
	int    version;      // lump format version
	char   fourCC[4];    // lump ident code
};

The first two integers contain the byte offset (from the beginning of the bsp file) and byte length of that lump's data block; an integer defining the version number of the format of that lump (usually zero), and then a four byte identifier that is usually 0, 0, 0, 0. For compressed lumps, the fourCC contains the uncompressed lump data size in integer form (see section Lump compression for details). Unused members of the lump_t array (those that have no data to point to) have all elements set to zero.

Lump offsets (and their corresponding data lumps) are always rounded up to the nearest 4-byte boundary, though the lump length may not be.

Lump types

The type of data pointed to by the lump_t array is defined by its position in the array; for example, the first lump in the array (Lump 0) is always the BSP file's entity data (see below). The actual location of the data in the BSP file is defined by the offset and length entries for that lump, and does not need to be in any particular order in the file; for example, the entity data is usually stored towards the end of the BSP file despite being first in the lump array. The array of lump_t headers is therefore a directory of the actual lump data, which may be located anywhere else in the file.

The order of the lumps in the array is defined as:

Todo: Postal III Postal III's Compile Tools produce BSPs with LUMP_FACES with 346 surfaces, figure out where to put that in this table.
Index Engine Name Purpose
0 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_ENTITIES Map entities
1 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_PLANES Plane array
2 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_TEXDATA Index to texture names
3 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_VERTEXES Vertex array
4 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_VISIBILITY Compressed visibility bit arrays
5 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_NODES BSP tree nodes
6 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_TEXINFO Face texture array
7 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_FACES Face array
8 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_LIGHTING Lightmap samples
9 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_OCCLUSION Occlusion polygons and vertices
10 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_LEAFS BSP tree leaf nodes
11 Source 2007 Source 2007/2009 LUMP_FACEIDS Correlates between dfaces and Hammer face IDs. Also used as random seed for detail prop placement.
12 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_EDGES Edge array
13 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_SURFEDGES Index of edges
14 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_MODELS Brush models (geometry of brush entities)
15 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_WORLDLIGHTS Internal world lights converted from the entity lump
16 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_LEAFFACES Index to faces in each leaf
17 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_LEAFBRUSHES Index to brushes in each leaf
18 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_BRUSHES Brush array
19 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_BRUSHSIDES Brushside array
20 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_AREAS Area array
21 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_AREAPORTALS Portals between areas
22 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_PORTALS
Confirm:Polygons defining the boundary between adjacent leaves?
Source 2007 Source 2007/2009 LUMP_UNUSED0 Unused
Left 4 Dead engine branch Source (L4D2 Branch) LUMP_PROPCOLLISION Static props convex hull lists
23 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_CLUSTERS Leaves that are enterable by the player
Source 2007 Source 2007/2009 LUMP_UNUSED1 Unused
Left 4 Dead engine branch Source (L4D2 Branch) LUMP_PROPHULLS Static prop convex hulls
24 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_PORTALVERTS Vertices of portal polygons
Source 2007 Source 2007/2009 LUMP_UNUSED2 Unused
Icon-TacInt256.png Source (TacInt branch) LUMP_FAKEENTITIES Used to store client side entities ( Similar to Lump #0 )
Left 4 Dead engine branch Source (L4D2 Branch) LUMP_PROPHULLVERTS Static prop collision vertices
25 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_CLUSTERPORTALS
Confirm:Polygons defining the boundary between adjacent clusters?
Source 2007 Source 2007/2009 LUMP_UNUSED3 Unused
Left 4 Dead engine branch Source (L4D2 Branch) LUMP_PROPTRIS Static prop per hull triangle index start/count
26 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_DISPINFO Displacement surface array
27 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_ORIGINALFACES Brush faces array before splitting
28 Source 2007 Source 2007/2009 LUMP_PHYSDISP Displacement physics collision data
29 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_PHYSCOLLIDE Physics collision data
30 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_VERTNORMALS Face plane normals
31 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_VERTNORMALINDICES Face plane normal index array
32 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_DISP_LIGHTMAP_ALPHAS Displacement lightmap alphas (unused/empty since Source 2006)
33 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_DISP_VERTS Vertices of displacement surface meshes
34 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_DISP_LIGHTMAP_SAMPLE_POSITIONS Displacement lightmap sample positions
35 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_GAME_LUMP Game-specific data lump
36 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_LEAFWATERDATA Data for leaf nodes that are inside water
37 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_PRIMITIVES Water polygon data
38 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_PRIMVERTS Water polygon vertices
39 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_PRIMINDICES Water polygon vertex index array
40 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_PAKFILE Embedded uncompressed or LZMA-compressed Zip-format file
41 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_CLIPPORTALVERTS Clipped portal polygon vertices
42 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_CUBEMAPS env_cubemap location array
43 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_TEXDATA_STRING_DATA Texture name data
44 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_TEXDATA_STRING_TABLE Index array into texdata string data
45 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_OVERLAYS info_overlay data array
46 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_LEAFMINDISTTOWATER Distance from leaves to water
47 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_FACE_MACRO_TEXTURE_INFO Macro texture info for faces
48 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_DISP_TRIS Displacement surface triangles
49 Source 2004 Source 2004 LUMP_PHYSCOLLIDESURFACE Compressed win32-specific Havok terrain surface collision data. Deprecated and no longer used.
Left 4 Dead engine branch Source (L4D2 Branch) LUMP_PROP_BLOB Static prop triangle and string data
50 Source 2006 Source 2006 LUMP_WATEROVERLAYS Tied to any entity that uses the info_overlay_transition helper in FGD
51 Source 2006 Source 2006 LUMP_LIGHTMAPPAGES Alternate lightdata implementation for Xbox
Source 2007 Source 2007/2009 LUMP_LEAF_AMBIENT_INDEX_HDR Index of LUMP_LEAF_AMBIENT_LIGHTING_HDR
52 Source 2006 Source 2006 LUMP_LIGHTMAPPAGEINFOS Alternate lightdata indices for Xbox
Source 2007 Source 2007/2009 LUMP_LEAF_AMBIENT_INDEX Index of LUMP_LEAF_AMBIENT_LIGHTING
53 Source 2006 Source 2006 LUMP_LIGHTING_HDR HDR lightmap samples
54 Source 2006 Source 2006 LUMP_WORLDLIGHTS_HDR Internal HDR world lights converted from the entity lump
55 Source 2006 Source 2006 LUMP_LEAF_AMBIENT_LIGHTING_HDR Per-leaf ambient light samples (HDR)
56 Source 2006 Source 2006 LUMP_LEAF_AMBIENT_LIGHTING Per-leaf ambient light samples (LDR)
57 Source 2006 Source 2006 LUMP_XZIPPAKFILE XZip version of pak file for Xbox. Deprecated.
58 Source 2006 Source 2006 LUMP_FACES_HDR HDR maps may have different face data
59 Source 2006 Source 2006 LUMP_MAP_FLAGS Extended level-wide flags. Not present in all levels.
60 Source 2007 Source 2007/2009 LUMP_OVERLAY_FADES Fade distances for overlays
61 Left 4 Dead engine branch Source (L4D Branch) LUMP_OVERLAY_SYSTEM_LEVELS System level settings (min/max CPU & GPU to render this overlay)
62 Left 4 Dead engine branch Source (L4D2 Branch) LUMP_PHYSLEVEL Wikipedia icon PhysX model of the World Brush.
Confirm:The code that generates this only present within Left 4 Dead 2 Left 4 Dead 2, unknown if any Engine Licensees with access to the L4D2 Branch also have access to it.
63 Alien Swarm engine branch Source (Alien Swarm branch) LUMP_DISP_MULTIBLEND Displacement multiblend info

Lumps 53-56 are only used in version 20+ BSP files. Lumps 22-25 are unused in version 20.

The structure of the data lumps for the known entries is described below. Many of the lumps are simple arrays of structures; however some are of variable length depending on their content. The maximum size or number of entries in each lump is also defined in the bspfile.h file, as MAX_MAP_*.

Finally, the header ends with an integer containing the map revision number. This number is based on the revision number of the map's vmf file (mapversion), which is increased each time the map is saved in the Hammer editor.

Immediately following the header is the first data lump. This can be any lump in the preceding list (pointed to using the offset field of that lump), though in practice the first data lump is Lump 1, the plane data array.

Lump compression

BSP files for console platforms such as PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 usually have their lumps compressed with LZMA. In this case, the lump data starts with the following header (from public/tier1/lzmaDecoder.h), which is used in place of the standard 13-byte LZMA header:

struct lzma_header_t
{
	unsigned int    id;
	unsigned int    actualSize;         // always little endian
	unsigned int    lzmaSize;           // always little endian
	unsigned char   properties[5];
};

Where id is defined as:

// little-endian "LZMA"
#define LZMA_ID	(('A'<<24)|('M'<<16)|('Z'<<8)|('L'))

lzmaSize denotes the size (in bytes) of compressed data, it is equal to the size of a lump minus 17 bytes (lzma header). actualSize denotes the size of decompressed data. properties[5] field are used solely for LZMA decoding.

There are two special cases for compression: LUMP_PAKFILE is never compressed as a lump (the contents of the zip are compressed instead) and each of the game lumps in LUMP_GAME_LUMP are compressed individually. The compressed size of a game lump can be determined by subtracting the current game lump's offset with that of the next entry. For this reason, when game lumps are compressed the last game lump is always an empty dummy which only contains the offset.

If you wish to manipulate a compressed lump in an external tool, you need to convert the header mentioned above to the standard LZMA header format. It is equivalent to:

struct standard_lzma_header
{
	unsigned char	properties[5];
	unsigned long	actualSize;      // 64-bit little endian
};

Lumps

Plane

The basis of the BSP geometry is defined by planes, which are used as splitting surfaces across the BSP tree structure.

The plane lump (Lump 1) is an array of dplane_t structures:

struct dplane_t
{
	Vector  normal;   // normal vector
	float   dist;     // distance from origin
	int     type;     // plane axis identifier
};

where the Vector type is a 3-vector defined as:

struct Vector
{
	float x;
	float y;
	float z;
};

Floats are 4 bytes long; there are thus 20 bytes per plane, and the plane lump should be a multiple of 20 bytes long.

The plane is represented by the element normal, a normal vector, which is a unit vector (length 1.0) perpendicular to the plane's surface. The position of the plane is given by dist, which is the distance from the map origin (0,0,0) to the nearest point on the plane.

Mathematically, the plane is described by the set of points (x, y, z) which satisfy the equation:

Ax + By + Cz = D

where A, B, and C are given by the components normal.x, normal.y and normal.z, and D is dist. Each plane is infinite in extent, and divides the whole of the map coordinate volume into three pieces, on the plane (F=0), in front of the plane (F>0), and behind the plane (F<0).

Note that planes have a particular orientation, corresponding to which side is considered "in front" of the plane, and which is "behind". The orientation of a plane can be flipped by negating the A, B, C, and D components.

The type member of the structure contains the axis that the plane is facing. It can be 0-5, with 0, 1, and 2 corresponding with X, Y, and Z respectively. Values of 3, 4 and 5 are used when planes are not along an axis, with each number corresponding to the axis it is closest to.

There can be up to 65536 planes in a map (MAX_MAP_PLANES).

Vertex

The vertex lump (Lump 3) is an array of coordinates of all the vertices (corners) of brushes in the map geometry. Each vertex is a Vector of 3 floats (x, y, and z), giving 12 bytes per vertex.

Note that vertices can be shared between faces, if the vertices coincide exactly.

There are a maximum of 65536 vertices in a map (MAX_MAP_VERTS).

Edge

The edge lump (Lump 12) is an array of dedge_t structures:

struct dedge_t
{
	unsigned short  v[2];  // vertex indices
};

Each edge is simply a pair of vertex indices (which index into the vertex lump array). The edge is defined as the straight line between the two vertices. Usually, the edge array is referenced through the Surfedge array (see below).

As for vertices, edges can be shared between adjacent faces. There is a limit of 256000 edges in a map (MAX_MAP_EDGES).

Surfedge

The Surfedge lump (Lump 13), presumable short for surface edge, is an array of (signed) integers. Surfedges are used to reference the edge array, in a somewhat complex way. The value in the surfedge array can be positive or negative. The absolute value of this number is an index into the edge array: if positive, it means the edge is defined from the first to the second vertex; if negative, from the second to the first vertex.

By this method, the Surfedge array allows edges to be referenced for a particular direction. (See the face lump entry below for more on why this is done).

There is a limit of 512000 (MAX_MAP_SURFEDGES) surfedges per map. Note that the number of surfedges is not necessarily the same as the number of edges in the map.

Face and original face

The face lump (Lump 7) contains the major geometry of the map, used by the game engine to render the viewpoint of the player. The face lump contains faces after they have undergone the BSP splitting process; they therefore do not directly correspond to the faces of brushes created in Hammer. Faces are always flat, convex polygons, though they can contain edges that are co-linear.

The face lump is one of the more complex structures of the map file. It is an array of dface_t entries, each 56 bytes long:

struct dface_t
{
	unsigned short  planenum;               // the plane number
	byte            side;                   // faces opposite to the node's plane direction
	byte            onNode;                 // 1 of on node, 0 if in leaf
	int             firstedge;              // index into surfedges
	short           numedges;               // number of surfedges
	short           texinfo;                // texture info
	short           dispinfo;               // displacement info
	short           surfaceFogVolumeID;     // ?
	byte            styles[4];              // switchable lighting info
	int             lightofs;               // offset into lightmap lump
	float           area;                   // face area in units^2
	int             LightmapTextureMinsInLuxels[2]; // texture lighting info
	int             LightmapTextureSizeInLuxels[2]; // texture lighting info
	int             origFace;               // original face this was split from
	unsigned short  numPrims;               // primitives
	unsigned short  firstPrimID;
	unsigned int    smoothingGroups;        // lightmap smoothing group
};

The first member planenum is the plane number, i.e., the index into the plane array that corresponds to the plane that is aligned with this face in the world. Side is zero if this plane faces in the same direction as the face (i.e. "out" of the face) or non-zero otherwise.

Animated x-ray view of d1_trainstation_01 with the three types of geometry data. View in full size here.

Firstedge is an index into the Surfedge array; this and the following numedges entries in the surfedge array define the edges of the face. As mentioned above, whether the value in the surfedge array is positive or negative indicates whether the corresponding pair of vertices listed in the Edge array should be traced from the first vertex to the second, or vice versa. The vertices which make up the face are thus referenced in clockwise order; when looking towards the face, each edge is traced in a clockwise direction. This makes rendering the faces easier, and allows quick culling of faces that face away from the viewpoint.

Texinfo is an index into the Texinfo array (see below), and represents the texture to be drawn on the face. Dispinfo is an index into the Dispinfo array is the face is a displacement surface (in which case, the face defines the boundaries of the surface); otherwise, it is -1. SurfaceFogVolumeID appears to be related to drawing fogging when the player's viewpoint is underwater or looking through water.

OrigFace is the index of the original face which was split to produce this face. NumPrims and firstPrimID are related to the drawing of "Non-polygonal primitives" (see below). The other members of the structure are used to reference face-lighting info (see the Lighting lump, below).

The face array is limited to 65536 (MAX_MAP_FACES) entries.

The original face lump (Lump 27) has the same structure as the face lump, but contains the array of faces before the BSP splitting process is done. These faces are therefore closer to the original brush faces present in the precompile map than the face array, and there are less of them. The origFace entry for all original faces is zero. The maximum size of the original face array is also 65536 entries.

Both the face and original face arrays are culled; that is, many faces present before compilation of the map (primarily those that face towards the "void" outside the map) are removed from the array.

Brush and brushside

The brush lump (Lump 18) contains all brushes that were present in the original VMF file before compiling. Unlike faces, brushes are constructive solid geometry (CSG) defined by planes instead of edges and vertices. It is the presence of the brush and brushside lumps in Source BSP files that makes decompiling them a much easier job than for GoldSrc files, which lacked this info. The lump is an array of 12-byte dbrush_t structures:

struct dbrush_t
{
	int    firstside;     // first brushside
	int    numsides;      // number of brushsides
	int    contents;      // contents flags
};

The first integer firstside is an index into the brushside array lump, this and the following numsides brushsides make up all the sides in this brush. The contents entry contains the contents flags, as defined in bspflags.h.

The brush array is limited to 8192 entries (MAX_MAP_BRUSHES).

The brushside lump (Lump 19) is an array of 8-byte structures:

struct dbrushside_t
{
	unsigned short  planenum;     // facing out of the leaf
	short           texinfo;      // texture info
	short           dispinfo;     // displacement info
	short           bevel;        // is the side a bevel plane?
};

Planenum is an index info the plane array, giving the plane corresponding to this brushside. Texinfo and dispinfo are references into the texture and displacement info lumps. Bevel is zero for normal brush sides, but 1 if the side is a bevel plane (which seem to be used for collision detection).

Unlike the face array, brushsides are not culled (removed) where they touch the void. Void-facing sides do however have their texinfo entry changed to the tools/toolsnodraw texture during the compile process. Note there is no direct way of linking brushes and brushsides and the corresponding face array entries which are used to render that brush. Brushsides are used by the engine to calculate all player physics collision with world brushes. (Vphysics objects use lump 29 instead.)

The maximum number of brushsides is 65536 (MAX_MAP_BRUSHSIDES). The maximum number of brushsides on a single brush is 128 (MAX_BRUSH_SIDES).

Node and leaf

The node array (Lump 5) and leaf array (Lump 10) define the Binary Space Partition (BSP) tree structure of the map. The BSP tree is used by the engine to quickly determine the location of the player's viewpoint with respect to the map geometry, and along with the visibility information (see below), to decide which parts of the map are to be drawn.

The nodes and leaves form a tree structure. Each leaf represents a defined volume of the map, and each node represents the volume which is the sum of all its child nodes and leaves further down the tree.

Each node has exactly two children, which can be either another node or a leaf. A child node has two further children, and so on until all branches of the tree are terminated with leaves, which have no children. Each node also references a plane in the plane array. When determining the player's viewpoint, the engine is trying to find which leaf the viewpoint falls inside. It first compares the coordinates of the point with the plane referenced in the headnode (Node 0). If the point is in front of the plane, it then moves to the first child of the node; otherwise, it moves to the second child. If the child is a leaf, then it has completed its task. If it is another node, it then performs the same check against the plane referenced in this node, and follows the children as before. It therefore traverses the BSP tree until it finds which leaf the viewpoint lies in. The leaves, then, completely divide up the map volume into a set of non-overlapping, convex volumes defined by the planes of their parent nodes.

For more information on how the BSP tree is constructed, see the article "BSP for dummies".

The node array consists of 32-byte structures:

struct dnode_t
{
	int             planenum;       // index into plane array
	int             children[2];    // negative numbers are -(leafs + 1), not nodes
	short           mins[3];        // for frustum culling
	short           maxs[3];
	unsigned short  firstface;      // index into face array
	unsigned short  numfaces;       // counting both sides
	short           area;           // If all leaves below this node are in the same area, then
	                                // this is the area index. If not, this is -1.
	short           paddding;       // pad to 32 bytes length
};

Planenum is the entry in the plane array. The children[] members are the two children of this node; if positive, they are node indices; if negative, the value (-1-child) is the index into the leaf array (e.g., the value -100 would reference leaf 99).

The members mins[] and maxs[] are coordinates of a rough bounding box surrounding the contents of this node. The firstface and numfaces are indices into the face array that show which map faces are contained in this node, or zero if none are. The area value is the map area of this node (see below). There can be a maximum of 65536 nodes in a map (MAX_MAP_NODES).

The leaf array is an array with 56 or 32 bytes per element, depending on the lump version:

struct dleaf_t
{
	int             contents;             // OR of all brushes (not needed?)
	short           cluster;              // cluster this leaf is in
	short           area:9;               // area this leaf is in
	short           flags:7;              // flags
	short           mins[3];              // for frustum culling
	short           maxs[3];
	unsigned short  firstleafface;        // index into leaffaces
	unsigned short  numleaffaces;
	unsigned short  firstleafbrush;       // index into leafbrushes
	unsigned short  numleafbrushes;
	short           leafWaterDataID;      // -1 for not in water

	//!!! NOTE: for lump version 0 (usually in maps of version 19 or lower) uncomment the next line
	//CompressedLightCube   ambientLighting;      // Precaculated light info for entities.
	short                 padding;              // padding to 4-byte boundary
};

The leaf structure has similar contents to the node structure, except it has no children and no reference plane. Additional entries are the contents flags (see the brush lump, above), which shows the contents of any brushes in the leaf, and the cluster number of the leaf (see below). The area and flags members share a 16-bit bitfield and contain the area number and flags relating to the leaf. Firstleafface and numleaffaces index into the leafface array and show which faces are inside this leaf, if any. Firstleafbrush and numleafbrushes likewise index brushes inside this leaf through the leafbrush array.

The ambientLighting element is related to lighting of objects in the leaf, and consists of a CompressedLightCube structure, which is 24 bytes in length. Version 17 BSP files have a modified dleaf_t structure that omits the ambient lighting data, making the entry for each leaf only 32 bytes in length. The same shortened structure is also used for version 20 BSP files, with the ambient lighting information for LDR and HDR probably contained in the new lumps 55 and 56.

All leaves are convex polyhedra, and are defined by the planes of their parent nodes. They do not overlap. Any point in the coordinate space is in one and only one leaf of the map. A leaf which is not filled with a solid brush and can be entered by the player in the usual course of the game has a cluster number set; this is used in conjunction with the visibility information (below).

There are usually multiple, unconnected BSP trees in a map. Each one corresponds to an entry in model array (see below) and the headnode of each tree is referenced there. The first tree is the worldspawn model, the overall geometry of the level. Successive trees are the models of each brush entity in the map.

The creation of the BSP tree is done by the VBSP program, during the first phase of map compilation. Exactly how the tree is created, and how the map is divided into leaves, can be influenced by the map author by the use of HINT brushes, func_details, and the careful layout of all brushes in the map.

LeafFace and LeafBrush

The leafface lump (Lump 16) is an array of unsigned shorts which are used to map from faces referenced in the leaf structure to indices in the face array. The leafbrush lump (also an array of unsigned shorts)(Lump 17) does the same thing for brushes referenced in leaves. Their maximum sizes are both 65536 entries (MAX_MAP_LEAFFACES, MAX_MAP_LEAFBRUSHES).

Textures

The texture information in a map is split across a number of different lumps. The Texinfo lump is the most fundamental, referenced by the face and brushside arrays, and it in turn references the other texture lumps.

Texinfo

The texinfo lump (Lump 6) contains an array of texinfo_t structures:

struct texinfo_t
{
	float   textureVecs[2][4];    // [s/t][xyz offset]
	float   lightmapVecs[2][4];   // [s/t][xyz offset] - length is in units of texels/area
	int     flags;                // miptex flags overrides
	int     texdata;              // Pointer to texture name, size, etc.
}

Each texinfo is 72 bytes long.

The first array of floats is in essence two vectors that represent how the texture is orientated and scaled when rendered on the world geometry. The two vectors, s and t, are the mapping of the left-to-right and down-to-up directions in the texture pixel coordinate space, onto the world. Each vector has an x, y, and z component, plus an offset which is the "shift" of the texture in that direction relative to the world. The length of the vectors represent the scaling of the texture in each direction.

The 2D coordinates (u, v) of a texture pixel (or texel) are mapped to the world coordinates (x, y, z) of a point on a face by:

u = tv0,0 * x + tv0,1 * y + tv0,2 * z + tv0,3

v = tv1,0 * x + tv1,1 * y + tv1,2 * z + tv1,3

(ie. The dot product of the vectors with the vertex plus the offset in that direction. Where tvA,B is textureVecs[A][B].

Furthermore, after calculating (u, v), to convert them to texture coordinates which you would send to your graphics card, divide u and v by the width and height of the texture respectively.

The lightmapVecs float array performs a similar mapping of the lightmap samples of the texture onto the world. It is the same formula but with lightmapVecs instead of textureVecs, and then subtracting the [0] and [1] values of LightmapTextureMinsInLuxels for u and v respectively. LightmapTextureMinsInLuxels is referenced in dface_t;

The flags entry contains surface flags, as defined in bspflags.h.

Texdata

Finally the texdata entry is an index into the Texdata array, and specifies the actual texture.

The index of a Texinfo (referenced from a face or brushside) may be given as -1; this indicates that no texture information is associated with this face. This occurs on compiling brush faces given the SKIP, CLIP, or INVISIBLE type textures in the editor.

The texdata array (Lump 2) consists of the structures:

struct dtexdata_t
{
	Vector  reflectivity;            // RGB reflectivity
	int     nameStringTableID;       // index into TexdataStringTable
	int     width, height;           // source image
	int     view_width, view_height;
};

The reflectivity vector corresponds to the RGB components of the reflectivity of the texture, as derived from the material's .vtf file. This is probably used in radiosity (lighting) calculations of what light bounces from the texture's surface. The nameStringTableID is an index into the TexdataStringTable array (below). The other members relate to the texture's source image.

TexdataStringData and TexdataStringTable

The TexdataStringTable (Lump 44) is an array of integers which are offsets into the TexdataStringData (lump 43). The TexdataStringData lump consists of concatenated null-terminated strings giving the texture name.

There can be a maximum of 12288 texinfos in a map (MAX_MAP_TEXINFO). There is a limit of 2048 texdatas in the array (MAX_MAP_TEXDATA) and up to 256000 bytes in the TexdataStringData data block (MAX_MAP_TEXDATA_STRING_DATA). Texture name strings are limited to 128 characters (TEXTURE_NAME_LENGTH).

Model

A Model, in the terminology of the BSP file format, is a collection of brushes and faces, often called a "bmodel". It should not be confused with the prop models used in Hammer, which are usually called "studiomodels" in the SDK source.

The model lump (Lump 14) consists of an array of 48-byte dmodel_t structures:

struct dmodel_t
{
	Vector  mins, maxs;            // bounding box
	Vector  origin;                // for sounds or lights
	int     headnode;              // index into node array
	int     firstface, numfaces;   // index into face array
};

Mins and maxs are the bounding points of the model. Origin is the coordinates of the model in the world, if set. Headnode is the index of the top node in the node array of the BSP tree which describes this model. Firstface and numfaces index into the face array and give the faces which make up this model.

The first model in the array (Model 0) is always "worldspawn", the overall geometry of the whole map excluding entities (but including func_detail and func_ladder brushes). The subsequent models in the array are associated with brush entities, and referenced from the entity lump.

There is a limit of 1024 models in a map (MAX_MAP_MODELS), including the worldspawn model zero. This is increased to 4069 in Jabroni Brawl: Episode 3 Jabroni Brawl: Episode 3.

Visibility

The visibility lump (Lump 4) is in a somewhat different format to the previously mentioned lumps. To understand it, some discussion of how the Source engine's visibility system works in necessary.

As mentioned in the Node and leaf lumps section above, every point in the map falls into exactly one convex volume called a leaf. All leaves that are on the inside of the map (not touching the void), and that are not covered by a solid brush can potentially have the player's viewpoint inside it during normal gameplay. Each of these enterable leaves (also called visleaves) gets assigned a cluster number. In Source BSP files, each enterable leaf corresponds to just one cluster.

(The terminology is slightly confusing here. According to the "Quake 2 BSP File Format" article, in the Q2 engine there could be multiple adjacent leaves in each cluster - thus the cluster is so called because it is a cluster of leaves. It seems from the SDK source that this situation may also occur during the compilation of Source maps; however, after the VVIS compile process is finished these adjacent leaves (and their parent nodes) are generally merged into a single leaf. In older Source maps (prior to Counter-Strike: Global Offensive Counter-Strike: Global Offensive) it seems there is only ever one leaf per cluster. However, in some CS:GO maps multiple leaves can belong to the same cluster in the final compiled BSP. This seems to occur particularly in the 3D skybox of most CS:GO maps, and can be seen in the main playable area of more recently refurbished maps such as de_cbble and de_nuke.)

Each cluster, then, is a volume in the map that the player can potentially be in. To render the map quickly, the game engine draws the geometry of only those clusters which are visible from the current cluster. Clusters which are completely occluded from view from the player's cluster need not be drawn. Calculating cluster-to-cluster visibility is the responsibility of the VVIS compile tool, and the resulting data is stored in the Visibility lump.

Once the engine knows a cluster is visible, the leaf data references all faces present in that cluster, allowing the contents of the cluster to be rendered.

The data is stored as an array of bit-vectors; for each cluster, a list of which other clusters are visible from it are stored as individual bits (1 if visible, 0 if occluded) in an array, with the nth bit position corresponding to the nth cluster. This is known as the cluster's Potentially Visible Set (PVS). Because of the large size of this data, the bit vectors are compressed by run-length encoding groups of zero bits in each vector.

There is also a Potentially Audible Set (PAS) array created for each cluster; this marks which clusters can hear sounds occurring in other clusters. The PAS seems to be created by merging the PVS bits of all clusters in current cluster's PVS.

The Visibilty lump is defined as:

struct dvis_t
{
	int	numclusters;
	int	byteofs[numclusters][2]
};

The first integer is the number of clusters in the map. It is followed by an array of integers giving the byte offset from the start of the lump to the start of the PVS bit array for each cluster, followed by the offset to the PAS array. Immediately following the array are the compressed bit vectors.

The decoding of the run-length compression works as follows: To find the PVS of a given cluster, start at the byte given by the offset in the byteofs[] array. If the current byte in the PVS buffer is zero, the following byte multiplied by 8 is the number of clusters to skip that are not visible. If the current byte is non-zero, the bits that are set correspond to clusters that are visible from this cluster. Continue until the number of clusters in the map is reached.

Example C code to decompress the bit vectors can be found in the "Quake 2 BSP File Format" document.

The maximum size of the Visibility lump is 0x1000000 bytes (MAX_MAP_VISIBILITY); that is, 16 Mb.

Entity

See also: Patching levels with lump files

The entity lump (Lump 0) is a null-terminated ASCII text buffer which stores the entity data in a format very similar to MAP files, but without any brushes. Its general form is:

{
	"world_maxs" "480 480 480"
	"world_mins" "-480 -480 -224"
	"maxpropscreenwidth" "-1"
	"skyname" "sky_wasteland02"
	"classname" "worldspawn"
}
{
	"origin" "-413.793 -384 -192"
	"angles" "0 0 0"
	"classname" "info_player_start"
}
{
	"model" "*1"
	"targetname" "secret_1"
	"origin" "424 -1536 1800"
	"Solidity" "1"
	"StartDisabled" "0"
	"InputFilter" "0"
	"disablereceiveshadows" "0"
	"disableshadows" "0"
	"rendermode" "0"
	"renderfx" "0"
	"rendercolor" "255 255 255"
	"renderamt" "255"
	"classname" "func_brush"
}

Entities are defined between opening and closing braces ({ and }) and list on each line a pair of key/value properties inside quotation marks. The first entity is always worldspawn. The classname property gives the entity type, and the targetname property gives the entity's name as defined in Hammer (if it has one). The model property is slightly special if it starts with an asterisk (*), the following number is an index into the model array (see above) which corresponds to a bmodel. Otherwise, the value contains the name of a compiled model. Other key/value pairs correspond to the properties of the entity as set in Hammer.

Note.pngNote:Some entities (including func_detail, env_cubemap, info_overlay and prop_static) are internal, and are stripped from the entity lump during the compile process, normally because they are absorbed by the world.

Depending on the Source engine version, the entity lump can contain 4096 (in Source 2004 Source 2004), 8192 (in Source 2013 Source 2013), 16384 (in Alien Swarm Alien Swarm) or 20480 (in Counter-Strike: Global Offensive Counter-Strike: Global Offensive) entities (MAX_MAP_ENTITIES). There is no limit on the entity lump inside the engine, this is a soft limit enforced by VBSP, which custom compilers can circumvent. These limits are independent from the engine's actual entity limit. Each key can be a maximum of 32 characters (MAX_KEY) and the value up to 1024 characters (MAX_VALUE).

In Team Fortress 2 Team Fortress 2 the Entity lump may be compressed. In such case the entity data is encoded using LZMA algorithm (see Lump compression).

Game lump

The Game lump (Lump 35) seems to be intended to be used for map data that is specific to a particular game using the Source engine, so that the file format can be extended without altering the previously defined format. It starts with a game lump header:

struct dgamelumpheader_t
{
	int lumpCount;  // number of game lumps
	dgamelump_t gamelump[lumpCount];
};

where the gamelump directory array is defined by:

struct dgamelump_t
{
	int             id;        // gamelump ID
	unsigned short  flags;     // flags
	unsigned short  version;   // gamelump version
	int             fileofs;   // offset to this gamelump
	int             filelen;   // length
};

The gamelump is identified by the 4-byte id member, which defines what data is stored in it, and the byte position of the data and its length is given in fileofs and filelen. Note that fileofs is relative to the beginning of the BSP file, not to the game lump offset. One exception is the console version of Portal 2 Portal 2, where fileofs is relative to the game lump offset, as one would expect.

Static props

Of interest is the gamelump which is used to store prop_static entities, which uses the gamelump ID of 'sprp' ASCII (1936749168 decimal). Unlike most other entities, static props are not stored in the entity lump. The gamelump formats used in Source are defined in the public/gamebspfile.h header file.

The first element of the static prop game lump is the dictionary; this is an integer count followed by the list of model (prop) names used in the map:

struct StaticPropDictLump_t
{
	int	dictEntries;
	char	name[128][dictEntries];	// model name
};

Each name entry is 128 characters long, null-padded to this length.

Following the dictionary is the leaf array:

struct StaticPropLeafLump_t
{
	int leafEntries;
	unsigned short	leaf[leafEntries];
};

Presumably, this array is used to index into the leaf lump to locate the leaves that each prop static is located in. Note that a prop static may span several leaves.

Next, an integer giving the number of StaticPropLump_t entries, followed by that many structures themselves:

struct StaticPropLump_t
{
	// v4
	Vector          Origin;            // origin
	QAngle          Angles;            // orientation (pitch yaw roll)
	
	// v4
	unsigned short  PropType;          // index into model name dictionary
	unsigned short  FirstLeaf;         // index into leaf array
	unsigned short  LeafCount;
	unsigned char   Solid;             // solidity type
	// every version except v7*
	unsigned char   Flags;
	// v4 still
	int             Skin;              // model skin numbers
	float           FadeMinDist;
	float           FadeMaxDist;
	Vector          LightingOrigin;    // for lighting
	// since v5
	float           ForcedFadeScale;   // fade distance scale
	// v6, v7, and v7* only
	unsigned short  MinDXLevel;        // minimum DirectX version to be visible
	unsigned short  MaxDXLevel;        // maximum DirectX version to be visible
	// v7* only
	unsigned int    Flags;
	unsigned short  LightmapResX;      // lightmap image width
	unsigned short	LightmapResY;      // lightmap image height
	// since v8
	unsigned char   MinCPULevel;
	unsigned char   MaxCPULevel;
	unsigned char   MinGPULevel;
	unsigned char   MaxGPULevel;
	// since v7
	color32         DiffuseModulation; // per instance color and alpha modulation
	// v9 and v10 only
	bool            DisableX360;       // if true, don't show on XBox 360 (4-bytes long)
	// since v10
	unsigned int    FlagsEx;           // Further bitflags.
	// since v11
	float           UniformScale;      // Prop scale
};

The coordinates of the prop are given by the Origin member; its orientation (pitch, yaw, roll) is given by the Angles entry, which is a 3-float vector. The PropType element is an index into the dictionary of prop model names, given above. The other elements correspond to the location of the prop in the BSP structure of the map, its lighting, and other entity properties as set in Hammer Hammer. The other elements (ForcedFadeScale, etc.) are only present in the static prop structure if the gamelump's specified version is high enough (see dgamelump_t.version); both version 4 and version 5 static prop gamelumps are used in official Half-Life 2 Half-Life 2 maps. Version 6 has been encountered in Team Fortress 2 Team Fortress 2; Version 7 is used in some Left 4 Dead Left 4 Dead maps, and a modified version 7 is present in Zeno Clash maps. Version 8 is used predominantly in Left 4 Dead Left 4 Dead, and version 9 in Left 4 Dead 2 Left 4 Dead 2. The new version 10 appears in Tactical Intervention. Version 11 is used in Counter-Strike: Global Offensive Counter-Strike: Global Offensive since the addition of uniform prop scaling (before this it was version 10). After version 7, DX level options were removed. In version 11 XBox 360 flags were removed.

Version 7* is used by games built on Source 2013 Multiplayer Source 2013 Multiplayer (Team Fortress 2 Team Fortress 2, Counter-Strike: Source Counter-Strike: Source, etc.) and may come across as either version 7 or 10. Specifically, Team Fortress 2 Team Fortress 2 has referred to it as version 7 in the past but now refers to it as version 10 even though they are identical. This version's structure is based on version 6 but rearranged such that Flags is an int and at the bottom, above two new entries. These new entries (LightmapResX and LightmapResY) control the width and height of the prop's lightmap image and are specific to this version.

For a list of flags used by Flags and FlagsEX, see static prop flags.

Other

Other gamelumps used in Source BSP files are the detail prop gamelump (dprp), and the detail prop lighting lump (dplt for LDR and dplh for HDR). These are used for prop_detail entities (grass tufts, etc.) automatically emitted by certain textures when placed on displacement surfaces.

There does not seem to be a specified limit on the size of the game lump.

Displacements

Displacement surfaces are the most complex parts of a BSP file, and only part of their format is covered here. Their data is split over a number of different data lumps in the file, but the fundamental reference to them is through the dispinfo lump (Lump 26). Dispinfos are referenced from the face, original face, and brushside arrays.

DispInfo

struct ddispinfo_t
{
	Vector                startPosition;                // start position used for orientation
	int                   DispVertStart;                // Index into LUMP_DISP_VERTS.
	int                   DispTriStart;                 // Index into LUMP_DISP_TRIS.
	int                   power;                        // power - indicates size of surface (2^power 1)
	int                   minTess;                      // minimum tesselation allowed
	float                 smoothingAngle;               // lighting smoothing angle
	int                   contents;                     // surface contents
	unsigned short        MapFace;                      // Which map face this displacement comes from.
	int                   LightmapAlphaStart;           // Index into ddisplightmapalpha.
	int                   LightmapSamplePositionStart;  // Index into LUMP_DISP_LIGHTMAP_SAMPLE_POSITIONS.
	CDispNeighbor         EdgeNeighbors[4];             // Indexed by NEIGHBOREDGE_ defines.
	CDispCornerNeighbors  CornerNeighbors[4];           // Indexed by CORNER_ defines.
	unsigned int          AllowedVerts[10];             // active verticies
};

The structure is 176 bytes long. The startPosition element is the coordinates of the first corner of the displacement. DispVertStart and DispTriStart are indices into the DispVerts and DispTris lumps. The power entry gives the number of subdivisions in the displacement surface - allowed values are 2, 3 and 4, and these correspond to 4, 8 and 16 subdivisions on each side of the displacement surface. The structure also references any neighbouring displacements on the sides or the corners of this displacement through the EdgeNeighbors and CornerNeighbors members. There are complex rules governing the order that these neighbour displacements are given; see the comments in bspfile.h for more. The MapFace value is an index into the face array and is face that was turned into a displacement surface. This face is used to set the texture and overall physical location and boundaries of the displacement.

DispVerts

The DispVerts lump (Lump 33) contains the vertex data of the displacements. It is given by:

struct dDispVert
{
	Vector  vec;    // Vector field defining displacement volume.
	float   dist;   // Displacement distances.
	float   alpha;  // "per vertex" alpha values.
};

where vec is the normalized vector of the offset of each displacement vertex from its original (flat) position; dist is the distance the offset has taken place; and alpha is the alpha-blending of the texture at that vertex.

A displacement of power p references (2^p + 1)^2 dispverts in the array, starting from the DispVertStart index.

DispTris

The DispTris lump (Lump 48) contains "triangle tags" or flags related to the properties of a particular triangle in the displacement mesh:

struct dDispTri
{
	unsigned short Tags;   // Displacement triangle tags.
};

where the flags are:

Name Value
DISPTRI_TAG_SURFACE 0x1
DISPTRI_TAG_WALKABLE 0x2
DISPTRI_TAG_BUILDABLE 0x4
DISPTRI_FLAG_SURFPROP1 0x8
DISPTRI_FLAG_SURFPROP2 0x10

There are 2x(2^p)^2 DispTri entries for a displacement of power p. They are presumably used to indicate properties for each triangle of the displacement such as whether the surface is walkable at that point (not too steep to climb).

There are a limit of 2048 Dispinfos per map, and the limits of DispVerts and DispTris are such that all 2048 displacements could be of power 4 (maximally subdivided).

Other displacement-related data are the DispLightmapAlphas (Lump 32) and DispLightmapSamplePos (Lump 34) lumps, which seem to relate to lighting of each displacement surface.

Pakfile

The Pakfile lump (Lump 40) is a special lump that can contains multiple files which are embedded into the bsp file. Usually, they contain special texture (.vtf) and material (.vmt) files which are used to store the reflection maps from env_cubemap entities in the map; these files are built and placed in the Pakfile lump when the buildcubemaps console command is executed. The Pakfile can optionally contain such things as custom textures and prop models used in the map, and are placed into the bsp file by using the BSPZIP program (or alternate programs such as Pakrat). These files are integrated into the game engine's file system and will be loaded preferentially before externally located files are used.

The format of the Pakfile lump is identical to that used by the Zip compression utility when no compression is specified (i.e., the individual files are stored in uncompressed format). In some branches, such as Source 2013 Multiplayer, LZMA compression can be used as well. If the Pakfile lump is extracted and written to a file, it can therefore be opened with WinZip and similar programs.

The header public/zip_uncompressed.h defines the structures present in the Pakfile lump. The last element in the lump is a ZIP_EndOfCentralDirRecord structure. This points to an array of ZIP_FileHeader structures immediately preceeding it, one for each file present in the Pak. Each of these headers then point to ZIP_LocalFileHeader structures that are followed by that file's data.

The Pakfile lump is usually the last element of the bsp file.

Cubemap

The Cubemap lump (Lump 42) is an array of 16-byte dcubemapsample_t structures:

struct dcubemapsample_t
{
	int    origin[3];    // position of light snapped to the nearest integer
	int    size;         // resolution of cubemap, 0 - default
};

The dcubemapsample_t structure defines the location of a env_cubemap entity in the map. The origin member contains integer x,y,z coordinates of the cubemap, and the size member is resolution of the cubemap, specified as 2^(size-1) pixels square. If set as 0, the default size of 6 (32x32 pixels) is used. There can be a maximum of 1024 (MAX_MAP_CUBEMAPSAMPLES) cubemaps in a file.

When the "buildcubemaps" console command is performed, six snapshots of the map (one for each direction) are taken at the location of each env_cubemap entity. These snapshots are stored in a multi-frame texture (vtf) file, which is added to the Pakfile lump (see above). The textures are named cX_Y_Z.vtf, where (X,Y,Z) are the (integer) coordinates of the corresponding cubemap.

Faces containing materials that are environment mapped (e.g. shiny textures) reference their assigned cubemap through their material name. A face with a material named (e.g.) walls/shiny.vmt is altered (new Texinfo & Texdata entries are created) to refer to a renamed material maps/mapname/walls/shiny_X_Y_Z.vmt, where (X,Y,Z) are the cubemap coordinates as before. This .vmt file is also stored in the Pakfile, and references the cubemap .vtf file through its $envmap property.

Version 20 files contain extra cX_Y_Z.hdr.vtf files in the Pakfile lump, containing HDR texture files in RGBA16161616F (16-bit per channel) format.

Overlay

Unlike the simpler decals (infodecal entities), info_overlays are removed from the entity lump and stored separately in the Overlay lump (Lump 45). The structure is reflects the properties of the entity in Hammer Hammer almost exactly:

struct doverlay_t
{
	int             Id;
	short           TexInfo;
	unsigned short  FaceCountAndRenderOrder;
	int             Ofaces[OVERLAY_BSP_FACE_COUNT];
	float           U[2];
	float           V[2];
	Vector          UVPoints[4];
	Vector          Origin;
	Vector          BasisNormal;
};

The FaceCountAndRenderOrder member is split into two parts; the lower 14 bits are the number of faces that the overlay appears on, with the top 2 bits being the render order of the overlay (for overlapping decals). The Ofaces array, which is 64 elements in size (OVERLAY_BSP_FACE_COUNT) are the indices into the face array indicating which map faces the overlay should be displayed on. The other elements set the texture, scale, and orientation of the overlay decal. There is no enforced limit on overlays inside the engine. VBSP enforces a limit of 512 (MAX_MAP_OVERLAYS, 1024 in Counter-Strike: Global Offensive Counter-Strike: Global Offensive), but custom compilers can circumvent this.

Lighting

The lighting lump (Lump 8) is used to store the static lightmap samples of map faces. Each lightmap sample is a colour tint that multiplies the colours of the underlying texture pixels, to produce lighting of varying intensity. These lightmaps are created during the VRAD phase of map compilation and are referenced from the dface_t structure. The current lighting lump version is 1.

Each dface_t may have a up to four lightstyles (MAXLIGHTMAPS) defined in its styles[] array (which contains 255 to represent no lightstyle). The number of luxels in each direction of the face is given by the two LightmapTextureSizeInLuxels[] members (plus 1), and the total number of luxels per face is thus:

(LightmapTextureSizeInLuxels[0] + 1) * (LightmapTextureSizeInLuxels[1] + 1)

Each face gives a byte offset into the lighting lump in its lightofs member (if no lighting information is used for this face e.g. faces with skybox, nodraw and invisible textures, lightofs is -1.) There are (number of lightstyles)*(number of luxels) lightmap samples for each face, where each sample is a 4-byte ColorRGBExp32 structure:

struct ColorRGBExp32
{
	byte r, g, b;
	signed char exponent;
};

Standard RGB format can be obtained from this by multiplying each colour component by 2^(exponent). For faces with bumpmapped textures, there are four times the usual number of lightmap samples, with one lightmap lit from each normal axis, and a fourth flat one used when bumpmapping is disabled.

Immediately preceeding the lightofs-referenced sample group, there are single samples containing the average lighting on the face, one for each lightstyle, in reverse order from that given in the styles[] array.

Version 20 BSP files contain a second, identically sized lighting lump (Lump 53). This is presumed to store more accurate (higher-precision) HDR data for each lightmap sample. The format is currently unknown, but is also 32 bits per sample.

The maximum size of the lighting lump is 0x1000000 bytes (MAX_MAP_LIGHTING), i.e. 16 MB, and can be mapped onto a 1024x512x32 atlas.

Confirm:What size atlas does Source actually use? IdTech 2 and GoldSrc used 128x128 atlases (see AllocBlock).

Ambient Lighting

The ambient lighting lumps (Lumps 55 and 56) are present in BSP version 20 and later. Lump 55 is used for HDR lighting, and Lump 56 is used for LDR lighting. These lumps are used to store the volumetric ambient lighting information in each leaf (i.e. lighting information for entities such as NPCs, the viewmodel, and non-static props). Prior to version 20, this data was stored in the leaf lump (Lump 10), in the dleaf_t structure, with far less precision than this newer lump allows.

Both ambient lighting lumps are arrays of dleafambientlighting_t structures:

struct dleafambientlighting_t
{
	CompressedLightCube	cube;
	byte x;		// fixed point fraction of leaf bounds
	byte y;		// fixed point fraction of leaf bounds
	byte z;		// fixed point fraction of leaf bounds
	byte pad;	// unused
};

Each leaf is associated with a number of these dleafambientlighting_t structures, each of which contains a cube of ambient light data at the position specified by the x, y, and z members. These coordinates are stored as fractions of the leaf's bounding box, i.e. a value of 0 for x represents the westmost position in the leaf, a value of 255 represents the eastmost position in the leaf, and a value of 128 represents the center of the leaf.

The lighting data for each sample is represented by a CompressedLightCube structure, which is simply an array of 6 ColorRGBExp32 structures as described in the previous section:

struct CompressedLightCube
{
	ColorRGBExp32 m_Color[6];
};

Each lighting sample in the array corresponds to the amount of lighting being received from each cardinal direction in 3D space.

At compile time, VRAD will randomly generate a number of ambient light sample positions for each leaf, and store the lighting information at each sample point in a dleafambientlighting_t structure. To associate each leaf with its collection of ambient samples, the ambient lighting index lumps (Lumps 51 and 52) are used. Lump 51 stores ambient light index information for HDR, and lump 52 stores the same information for LDR.

The ambient light index lumps are arrays of dleafambientindex_t structures:

struct dleafambientindex_t
{
	unsigned short ambientSampleCount;
	unsigned short firstAmbientSample;
};

The Nth dleafambientindex_t structure in this array always corresponds to the Nth leaf in the dleaf_t array. The ambientSampleCount field is the number of ambient samples associated with the corresponding leaf, and firstAmbientSample is an index into the ambient lighting array, referring to the first sample in the array that is associated with this leaf.

Occlusion

The occlusion lump (Lump 9) contains the polygon geometry and some flags used by func_occluder entities. Unlike other brush entities, func_occluders don't use the 'model' key in the entity lump. Instead, the brushes are split from the entities during the compile process and numeric occluder keys are assigned as 'occludernum'. Brush sides textured with tools/toolsoccluder or tools/toolstrigger are then stored together with the occluder keys and some additional info in this lump.

The lump is divided into three parts and begins with a integer value with the total number of occluders, followed by an array of doccluderdata_t fields of the same size. The next part begins with another integer value, this time for the total number of occluder polygons, as well as an array of doccluderpolydata_t fields of equal size. Part three begins with another integer value for the amount of occluder polygon vertices, followed by an array of integer values for the vertex indices, again of the same size.

struct doccluder_t
{
	int			count;
	doccluderdata_t		data[count];
	int			polyDataCount;
	doccluderpolydata_t	polyData[polyDataCount];
	int			vertexIndexCount;
	int			vertexIndices[vertexIndexCount];
};

The doccluderdata_t structure contains flags and dimensions of the occluder, as well as the area where it remains. firstpoly is the first index into the doccluderpolydata_t with a total of polycount entries.

struct doccluderdata_t
{
	int	flags;
	int	firstpoly;	// index into doccluderpolys
	int	polycount;	// amount of polygons
	Vector	mins;	        // minima of all vertices
	Vector	maxs;	        // maxima of all vertices
	// since v1
	int	area;
};

Occluder polygons are stored in the doccluderpolydata_t structure and contain the firstvertexindex field, which is the first index into the vertex array of the occluder, which are again indices for the vertex array of the vertex lump (Lump 3). The total number of vertex indices is stored in vertexcount.

struct doccluderpolydata_t
{
	int	firstvertexindex;	// index into doccludervertindices
	int	vertexcount;		// amount of vertex indices
	int	planenum;
};

Physics

The physcollide lump (Lump 29) contains physics data for the world.

The lump consists of a sequence of models, where each model consists of:

  • a dphysmodel_t header
   struct dphysmodel_t
   {
       int modelIndex;  // Perhaps the index of the model to which this physics model applies?
       int dataSize;    // Total size of the collision data sections
       int keydataSize; // Size of the text section
       int solidCount;  // Number of collision data sections
   };
  • a series of collision data sections (including compactsurfaceheader_t header)
  • a text section

The lump is terminated by a dphysmodel_t structure with the modelIndex set to -1.

The last two parts appear to be identical to the PHY file format, which means their exact contents are unknown. Note that the compactsurfaceheader_t structure contains the data size of each collision data section (including the rest of the header), so the lump can be parsed as follows:

   while(true) {
       header = readHeader();
       if(header.modelIndex == -1)
           break;
       
       for(int k = 0; k < header.solidCount; k++) {
           size = read4ByteInt();
           collisionData = readBytes(size);
       }
       
       textData = readBytes(header.keydataSize);
   }

Worldlights

The worldlights lumps (Lump 15 for LDR and Lump 54 for HDR) contain information on each static light entity in the world, and are used to provide direct lighting for dynamically lit entities. The data is generated by VRAD from the entity lump. VRAD uses information from these lumps instead of referring to light entities from Entity lump. Both lumps have the same data structure containing contiguous dworldlight_t structs:

// lights that were used to illuminate the world
enum emittype_t
{
	emit_surface,		// 90 degree spotlight
	emit_point,			// simple point light source
	emit_spotlight,		// spotlight with penumbra
	emit_skylight,		// directional light with no falloff (surface must trace to SKY texture)
	emit_quakelight,	// linear falloff, non-lambertian
	emit_skyambient,	// spherical light source with no falloff (surface must trace to SKY texture)
};

// Flags for dworldlight_t::flags
#define DWL_FLAGS_INAMBIENTCUBE		0x0001	// This says that the light was put into the per-leaf ambient cubes.

struct dworldlight_t
{
	Vector		origin;					
	Vector		intensity;
	Vector		normal;		// for surfaces and spotlights
	int		cluster;
	emittype_t	type; //int, 0 - surface, 1 - point, 2 - spot, 3 - sky, 4 - quakelight, 5 - sky ambient 
	int		style;
	float		stopdot;		// start of penumbra for emit_spotlight
	float		stopdot2;		// end of penumbra for emit_spotlight
	float		exponent;		// 
	float		radius;			// cutoff distance
	// falloff for emit_spotlight + emit_point: 
	// 1 / (constant_attn + linear_attn * dist + quadratic_attn * dist^2)
	float		constant_attn;	
	float		linear_attn;
	float		quadratic_attn;
	int		flags;			// Uses a combination of the DWL_FLAGS_ defines.
	int		texinfo;		// 
	int		owner;			// entity that this light it relative to
};

The size of this struct is 88 bytes, therefore a number of entries in the lump can be determined by dividing the lump length by 88.

Up to two lights from this lump may influence dynamic lighting.

Confirm:Does the worldlights lump's dynamic lighting work by creating elights on the MDL?
Note.pngNote:If VRAD tries to exceed MAX_MAP_WORLDLIGHTS, it will spit out a too many lights error. This is a compiler limit, not an engine one, and can be bypassed with a custom RAD compiler.

Other

Todo: Some of these information are likely guesses and need further research.
  • The Areas lump (Lump 20) references the Areaportals lump (Lump 21) and is used with func_areaportal and func_areaportalwindow entities to define sections of the map that can be switched to render or not render.
  • The Portals (Lump 22), Clusters (Lump 23), PortalVerts (Lump 24), ClusterPortals (Lump 25), and ClipPortalVerts (Lump 41) lumps are used by the VVIS phase of the compile to ascertain which clusters can see which other clusters. A cluster is a player-enterable leaf volume in the map (see above). A "portal" is a polygon boundary between a cluster or leaf and an adjacent cluster or leaf. Most of this information is also used by the VRAD program to calculate static lighting, and then is removed from the bsp file.
  • PhysCollide Lumps (Lump 29) and PhysCollideSurface (Lump 49) lumps seem to be related to the physical simulation of entity collisions in the game engine.
  • The VertNormal (Lump 30) and VertNormalIndices (Lump 31) lumps may be related to smoothing of lightmaps on faces.
  • The FaceMacroTextureInfo lump (Lump 47) is a short array containing the same number of members as the number of faces in the map. If the entry for a face contains anything other than -1 (0xFFFF), it is an index of a texture name in the TexDataStringTable. In VRAD, the corresponding texture is mapped onto the world extents, and used to modulate the lightmaps of that face. There is also a base macro texture (located at materials/macro/mapname/base.vtf) that is applied to all faces if found. Only maps in VTMB seem to make any use of macro textures.
  • LeafWaterData (Lump 36) and LeafMinDistToWater (Lump 46) lumps may be used to determine player position with respect to water volumes.
  • The Primitives (Lump 37), PrimVerts (Lump 38) and PrimIndices (Lump 39) lumps are used in reference to "non-polygonal primitives". They are also sometimes called "waterstrips", "waterverts" and "waterindices" in the SDK Source, since they were originally only used to subdivide water meshes. They are now used to prevent the appearance of cracks between adjacent faces, if the face edges contain a "T-junction" (a vertex collinearly between two other vertices). The PrimIndices lump defines a set of triangles between face vertices, that tessellate the face. They are referenced from the Primatives lump, which is in turn referenced by the face lump data. Current maps do not seem to use the PrimVerts lump at all. (Ref.)
  • Version 20 files containing HDR lighting information have four extra lumps, the contents of which are currently uncertain. Lump 53 is always the same size as the standard lighting lump (Lump 8) and probably contains higher-precision data for each lightmap sample. Lump 54 is the same size as the worldlight lump (Lump 15) and presumably contains HDR-related data for each light entity.